Wilson & Aull v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.

66 Mo. App. 388, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 75
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 4, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 66 Mo. App. 388 (Wilson & Aull v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson & Aull v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co., 66 Mo. App. 388, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 75 (Mo. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Smith, P. J.

This is an action to recover damages for the breach of a verbal contract, by which the defendant undertook to receive and ship ten car loads of cattle, on the evening of July 9, 1894, from its station at the city of Lexington, to Kansas City.

[391]*391The defense interposed by the answer was that on the eleventh day of July, 1894, the plaintiffs and defendant entered into a written contract, for the shipment of the plaintiffs’ cattle, in which said contract there was a clause to the effect that the plaintiffs released any and all causes of action for damages that might have accrued to them on any verbal contract entered into prior to the execution of such written contract.

The replication was that the said release pleaded by the defendant was without consideration and void.

There was a trial and judgment for plaintiffs, and from the latter the defendant has appealed.

I. The defendant objects that the trial court erred in giving that part of plaintiffs’ first instruction which declared to the jury that the evidence was sufficient to support the authority of defendant’s station agent to verbally contract to ship the plaintiffs’ cattle from Lexington station, on the night of July 9, 1894. The authority of the servants of a carrier is ordinarily a question of fact, like any other fact to be determined by the jury, and the burden of proof rests on the party claiming such authority. 2 Redfield on Railways, 145-149. When a station agent, clothed with the power to receive and forward freight, makes a contract within the scope of his apparent authority, he thereby binds the company, though he may have exceeded his authority; and when such company seeks to avoid liability, arising under such contract, on the ground that its agent had no such authority, it must show that the party with whom the contract was made had knowledge of the fact that the agent was acting beyond his authority. Pruitt v. Railroad, 62 Mo. 540; Harrison v. Railroad, 74 Mo. 364; Northrup v. Ins. Co., 47 Mo. 439; Miller v. Railroad, 62 Mo. App. 252.

In the present case the undisputed evidence shows [392]*392that the defendant’s station agent was authorized to receive and forward freight, and that the making of the contract in question was within the scope of his apparent authority. It must be therefore held, as a matter of law, that he thereby bound defendant, although he may have exceeded his authority, since it does not appear that the plaintiffs had knowledge of the fact, if it was a fact, that he was acting beyond his authority. We do not think that it was error for the court to direct the jury, as it did, to the effect that the evidence was sufficient to establish the authority of the defendant’s agent to make the contract. If the question of the authority of defendant’s station agent had been left to the jury, under a proper instruction, they could not have found otherwise than that the defendant’s agent had the authority claimed by plaintiffs. Even though the part of the instruction referred to is inaccurate in its expression of the law, it was nevertheless harmless.

II. The defendant further objects that the court erred in giving the plaintiffs’ second, and in refusing defendant’s third, instruction in relation to the release pleaded and relied on by defendant as a defense. The written contract of affreightment under which the plaintiffs’ cattle were shipped, provided that the defendant would ship plaintiffs’ cattle from Lexington station to Kansas City, “at the rate of $14.30 per car, said rate being less than the rate charged for shipments transported at carrier’s risk, ’ ’ or a reduced rate. The release pleaded was embraced in the tenth clause of this contract.

The “freight tariff,” of defendant, in force at the ■time of plaintiffs’ shipment, contained the following special instructions to its agents, viz.: “(4) One hundred and fifty per cent of the rates named in this ■ tariff will be charged on shipments made without firm[393]*393tation of- company’s liability at common law and under the statutes.”

The undisputed evidence showed that the distance from Lexington to Kansas City is forty-three miles. By section 2674, Revised Statutes, live stock is placed in class “H;” and, under section 2675, the maximum charge of class “H” is $10 per car load for the first twenty-five miles, and $7 per car load for the second twenty-five miles. The maximum rate which defendant was allowed to charge, under the statute, for a car load of cattle shipped from Lexington to Kansas City, was $17. When the plaintiffs offered their cattle for shipment, the defendant in effect said to them something like this: “We will charge you our maximum rate of one hundred and fifty per cent of the rate named in our “Freight Tariff,” or $21.45 for each car load of cattle we transport for you from Lexington to Kansas City, unless you will enter into a special contract of affreightment with us releasing any cause of action you may have, under the prior verbal contract made with us, in which case we will ship your cattle for our minimum rate of $14.30 for each car load.” But, as we have just seen, one hundred and fifty per cent of the rate named in defendant’s freight tariff would be in excess of the maximum rate allowed by the statute. The plaintiffs were required by the defendant to accept one of two alternatives, namely: to either pay the defendant’s illegal and extorsive maximum rate, or execute the written contract releasing the cause of action that had accrued to them against defendant, on their prior verbal contract for the shipment of the cattle, and thereby get defendant’s minimum rate.

A case might well be, if this is not one, where the defendant’s minimum rate added to the amount of the damages sustained by the breach of the prior verbal agreement by the carrier, would very far exceed the [394]*394máximum rate of the latter. The defendant did not show that it had a higher legal rate in force than that specified in the release contract. The one hundred and fifty per cent of the rate named in its freight tariff was illegal and therefore not a valid rate. If there was no higher rate than that charged, how can it be said that the rate charged in the release contract was a reduced rate? Reduced from what rate? A reduced rate implies that there was a higher legal rate, of which, as we have seen, there was none. Since the rate charged was not a reduced rate, from a higher to a lower, it is obvious that it could constitute no consideration whatever for the release. If there was no consideration for the release, it was inoperative. Paddock v. Railroad, 60 Mo. App. 328; Duvenick v. Railroad, 57 Mo. App. 550.

The plaintiffs’ said second instruction, telling the jury that the release clause was void, if they believed from the evidence that the plaintiffs had given notice when they executed the same, that they did not waive-their claims for damages for the breach of the prior verbal contract, while not a correct exposition of the law, yet, inasmuch as the verdict was the only one the jury could properly have returned on the issue as-to the release, we think the error was harmless. Green v. Bank, 128 Mo. 559, and cases there cited. As the enunciation of the defendant’s said third refused instruction is at variance with the views of the law in this paragraph expressed, we must hold that it was properly refused.

III.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Mo. App. 388, 1896 Mo. App. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-aull-v-missouri-pacific-railway-co-moctapp-1896.